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Transcript
1
Genome
 Genome: Complete complement of an
organism’s DNA.
 Includes genes (control traits) and noncoding DNA organized in chromosomes.
2
Genes
Eukaryotic DNA is
organized in
chromosomes.
Genes have specific
places on chromosomes.
3
Heredity
 Heredity – way of
transferring genetic
information to
offspring
 Chromosome theory
of heredity:
chromosomes carry
genes.
 Gene – “unit of
heredity”.
4
Reproduction
 Asexual
 Many single-celled organisms reproduce
by splitting, budding, parthenogenesis.
 Some multicellular organisms can
reproduce asexually, produce clones
(offspring genetically identical to parent).
5
Sexual reproduction
 Fusion of two gametes to produce a single
zygote.
 Introduces greater genetic variation,
allows genetic recombination.
 With exception of self-fertilizing organisms
(e.g. some plants), zygote has gametes
from two different parents.
6
Chromosomes
 Karyotype:
 ordered display of an individual’s
chromosomes.
 Collection of chromosomes from mitotic
cells.
 Staining can reveal visible band patterns,
gross anomalies.
7
8
9
Meiosis KM
10
Homologues
 Chromosomes exist in homologous pairs
in diploid cells.
Exception: Sex chromosomes (X, Y).
Other chromosomes are known as
autosomes, they have homologues.
11
In humans …
 23 chromosomes donated by each parent (total
= 46 or 23 pairs).
 Gametes (sperm/ova):
 Contain 22 autosomes and 1 sex chromosome.
 Are haploid (haploid number “n” = 23 in humans).
 Fertilization results in zygote with 2 haploid sets
of chromosomes - now diploid.
 Diploid cell; 2n = 46. (n=23 in humans)
 Most cells in the body produced by mitosis.
 Only gametes are produced by meiosis.
12
Chromosome numbers
All are even numbers –
diploid (2n) sets of
homologous
chromosomes!
Meiosis KM
13
Ploidy = number of
copies of each
chromosome.
Diploidy
Meiosis – key differences from
mitosis
 Meiosis reduces the number of chromosomes
by half.
 Daughter cells differ from parent, and each
other.
 Meiosis involves two divisions, Mitosis only
one.
14
15
Animation
16
Mitosis vs. meiosis
Meiosis KM
17
Meiosis creates genetic
variation
 During normal cell growth, mitosis produces
daughter cells identical to parent cell (2n to 2n)
 Meiosis results in genetic variation by shuffling
of maternal and paternal chromosomes and
crossing over.
No daughter cells formed during meiosis are
genetically identical to either mother or father
During sexual reproduction, fusion of the
unique haploid gametes produces truly unique
offspring.
18
Independent assortment
19
Independent assortment
Number of combinations: 2n
Meiosis KM
e.g. 2 chromosomes in haploid
2n = 4; n = 2
2n = 22 = 4 possible
combinations
20
In humans
e.g. 23 chromosomes in haploid
2n = 46; n = 23
2n = 223 = ~ 8 million possible
combinations!
21
Random fertilization
At least 8 million combinations from Mom,
and another 8 million from Dad …
>64 trillion combinations for a diploid
zygote!!!
Meiosis KM
22
Meiosis & sexual life cycles
 Life cycle = sequence of
stages in organisms
reproductive history;
conception to
reproduction.
 Somatic cells = any cell
other than gametes,
most of the cells in the
body.
 Gametes produced by
meiosis.
Generalized animal life cycle
23
Sex is costly!
 Large amounts of energy required to find a mate
and do the mating: specialized structures and
behavior required
 Intimate contact provides route for infection by
parasites (AIDS, syphillis, etc.)
 Genetic costs: in sex, we pass on only half of
genes to offspring.
24
But …
 More genetic diversity: more potential for survival of
species when environmental conditions change.
 Shuffling of genes in meiosis
 Crossing-over in meiosis
 Fertilization: combines genes from 2 separate individuals
 DNA back-up and repair.
 Asexual organisms don't have back-up copies of genes,
sexual organisms have 2 sets of chromosomes and one can
act as a back-up if the other is damaged.
 Sexual mechanisms, especially recombination, are used to
repair damaged DNA - the undamaged chromosome acts as
a template and eventually both chromosomes end up with
the correct gene.
25